| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Scott - Law reports, digests, etc - 1843 - 966 pages
...ascertained ; or conditionally, when those words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...the jury cannot be set right at all effectually." Upon the face of this specification, it is quite uncertain what is the real object of the patent. It... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Scott - Law reports, digests, etc - 1843 - 962 pages
...ascertained ; or conditionally, when those words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...the jury cannot be set right at all effectually." Upon the face of this specification, it is quite uncertain what is the real object of the patent. It... | |
| Thomas Webster - Patent laws and legislation - 1844 - 796 pages
...ascertained, or conditionally, where those words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...by the jury cannot be set right at all effectually. Then, taking the construction of this specification upon ourselves, as we arc bound to do, it becomes... | |
| Thomas Webster - Law reports, digests, etc - 1844 - 1114 pages
...ascertained, or conditionally, where those words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...by the court is the proper subject, by means of a hill of exceptions, of redress in a court of error, but a misconstruction by the jury cannot be set... | |
| Herbert Broom - Legal maxims - 1845 - 544 pages
...ascertained, — or conditionally, when those words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...by the jury cannot be set right at all effectually («). For instance, the coustrucKey, 11 A. & E. 825. Nor will the court of error, upon a special verdict,... | |
| International law - 1845 - 532 pages
...ascertained ; or conditionally, when these words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...of error ; but a misconstruction by the jury cannot in any way be effectually set right."1 Thus, the court will construe the specification of a patent,... | |
| International law - 1845 - 542 pages
...ascertained; or conditionally, when these words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...of error; but a misconstruction by the jury cannot in any way be effectually set right." 1 Thus, the court will construe the specification of a patent,... | |
| John Pitt Taylor - Evidence (Law) - 1848 - 764 pages
...ascertained ; or conditionally, when those words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Unless this were so, there would be no certainty in...of error ; but a misconstruction by the jury cannot in any way be (0 Peters v. Fleming, 6 M. & W. 42. (j) Harrison ». Fane, 1 M. & Gr. 550. (k) Wharton... | |
| William Johnson, New York (State). Supreme Court - Law reports, digests, etc - 1849 - 866 pages
...conditionally, when such words or circumstances are necessarily referred to them. Uuless this were so, therb would be no certainty in the law ; for a misconstruction...by the jury cannot be set right at all effectually. (Per Parke, B., delivering the judgment of the court, Neilmn v. Harford, 8 M. and W. 823. Per Erskine,... | |
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